Three lederhosen in St. Tropez

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Movie
Original title Three lederhosen in St. Tropez
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1980
length 92 minutes
Age rating FSK 18
Rod
Director Franz Marischka
script Kurt Eiser
Franz Marischka
production Leon Pulwer
music Adi Stahuber and his Isartaler brass music
camera Ernst W. Kalinke
cut Gerd Berner
occupation

Drei Lederhosen in St. Tropez is a German soft sex film comedy directed by Franz Marischka from the Lederhosen series .

action

The Bavarian village mayor Peter Eichel is the owner of the breeding bull "Hereditary Prince of Upper Bavaria", whose birthday is even celebrated by the village community. When he received an invitation to a breeding bull show in Avignon in the south of France , he drove to Avignon in a Mercedes pickup with a bull together with the village police officer Korbinian Zangerl and the waiter Paloma, an alleged Spaniard. But the truck breaks down, and luckily they get to a mobile home. With that you miss the departure and land instead in St. Tropez .

Once there, they mingle with the scantily clad women on the beach, where they are mistaken for princes. The three Bavarians experience various sex adventures, their caravan with the bull is towed away and they contact the police. There one initially believes in a child abduction, but quickly realizes that the "Hereditary Prince of Upper Bavaria" is a bull. He got the wrong bag because of a mix-up in the hotel and instead of carrots he eats 30 million francs from a robbery. Then they get into the hands of the robbers, but can free themselves.

Production notes

Drei Lederhosen in St. Tropez was created from September 5 to October 2, 1980 in Bavaria (Munich, Allgäu, Moosach) and southern France (St. Tropez) and was premiered on December 19, 1980.

Producer Leon Pulwer also took over the production management. Georg Stiehle took care of the equipment, Karin Zenker provided the costumes. Fritz Baader assisted head cameraman Ernst W. Kalinke , who also made a brief appearance in front of the camera.

criticism

The lexicon of the international film saw in the strip a “mixture of rough peasant theater jokes, nudity and charming landscape”.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Three Lederhosen in St. Tropez. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed January 14, 2018 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used